The trip to Saba gets interesting before you even set foot on its soil. Its tiny airport sits on a plateau between a jagged coastline and sharply rising cliffs on the north side of the island, where the winds often howl. The runway is the shortest commercial one in the world at 1,312 feet and is completely incapable of handling anything larger than a 15- or 20-seat intra-island plane (for comparison, Denver has the longest commercial runway in the US at 16,000 feet). This makes for a landing you won’t forget.
This arrival sets the tone for a visit that will bust through all the Caribbean stereotypes you’ve been harboring. This Dutch municipality, just east of the Virgin Islands and just north of St. Kitts, is only five square miles in total size and has a population under 2,000. It’s a volcanic rock that rises straight up from the sea with a summit that has a knack for collecting clouds. The island has only one natural beach, usable only half the year due to the strong currents that rush right up to the base of its tall sea cliffs.
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Visiting a minuscule Caribbean Island without beaches might sound limiting, but the small size, short runway, absence of beaches and lack of infrastructure is exactly what earns Saba its nickname of the “Unspoiled Queen”. As far as the cruise industry is concerned, this is not a proper destination for mass tourism; the tiny island has been left alone, free to be authentically itself. This translates to hiking trails so infrequently used that they’re lightly overgrown by grass, as well as thriving, healthy coral reefs just offshore.

Where to Stay
The walkability of the island complements the hotel scene and creates a rare opportunity for visitors to hike from one hotel to the other. This doesn’t mean walking down a road — it’s a real route via trails that connect three very different properties in three very different locations on the island. A potential route: spend the night at the locally run Juliana’s Hotel or the prison-turned-hotel Scout’s Place in the town of Windwardside, then hike one hour into the rainforest and check in to a cottage at the Rainforest Ecolodge. The next day, continue on the trail for another hour to the island’s capital, The Bottom, for a night at the luxurious Queen’s Garden Resort, the crown jewel of the island that overlooks The Bottom from its perch on the mountain, offering suite-style accommodations, an on-site spa and a bed-and-breakfast atmosphere cultivated by the hotel’s owners, Claire and Hiddy. This novel hotel-to-hotel hike is contingent upon the fact that you travel with a backpack, of course, as jungles and rolling suitcases don’t mix.
